April 27, 2026
Thomas Edison & Menlo Park

Thomas Edison & Menlo Park

The Creator of the First Industrial Research and Development Laboratory

This nomination for Thomas Edison and the team at his Menlo Park laboratory, established in 1876, which he dubbed an “invention factory.” This was not a lone inventor’s workshop but the world’s first industrial research and development laboratory, a systematic approach to innovation. Edison assembled a team of specialists—machinists, scientists, draftsmen—and worked on multiple projects in parallel, aiming to produce a “minor invention every ten days and a big thing every six months or so.” This organized, goal-oriented process yielded breakthroughs like the phonograph and a commercially viable electric light system. Edison understood that invention was not enough; it had to be part of a sellable system (including generators, wiring, and fixtures). He proved that innovation could be industrialized—turned into a predictable, managed process—and that the business of technology lies in creating and controlling entire ecosystems, not just discrete devices.

Alan

Alan Nafzger is a writer and academic originally from Texas with a background in history and political science. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Midwestern State University and a master’s from Texas State University in San Marcos, then completed his Ph.D. at University College Dublin in Ireland, focusing on Leninism and the Russian Revolution. Nafzger has authored dark novels and experimental screenplays, including works produced internationally, blending literary craft with cultural critique. He is also known for his work in satirical commentary, hosting and contributing to multiple satire-focused platforms where he explores modern society’s absurdities with sharp insight and humor. He is editor-in-chief of the seriously funny Bohiney.com.

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